Pitts v. Looby

46 Ill. App. 54, 1891 Ill. App. LEXIS 501
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 11, 1892
StatusPublished

This text of 46 Ill. App. 54 (Pitts v. Looby) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pitts v. Looby, 46 Ill. App. 54, 1891 Ill. App. LEXIS 501 (Ill. Ct. App. 1892).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Pleasants.

Appellee brought this suit against appellant before a justice of the peace for alleged injury to her real estate by cutting down and removing trees standing thereon. On appeal she obtained judgment upon a verdict for $33.20, which the court refused to set aside.

Appellant admitted the cutting and removing of the trees as charged, but denied that appellee had such possession of the locus as would entitle her to maintain this action. The parties respectively owned what they supposed to be adjoining tracts, which were parcels of a larger tract including also other land formerly belonging to Wesley Whipp. Appellee claimed under a deed from him to her uncle, Robert Boyer, executed in December, 1831. In 18G1, after Whipp’s death, partition proceedings were instituted, in the course of which his remaining land was sold by the master in chancery to Milam Alkire, under whom appellant claimed. Appellee’s tract was in the shape of a triangle, beginning at a point designated as iC at a corner of William Engles’, a few rods from a brook, which corner is thus described, viz.: a post, having a hickory fourteen inches diameter, bearing south eighty-five and one-half degrees east, distant thirty-one links,” and running thence almost due east twenty-three and thirty-five one-hundredths chains to a post located by reference to a bearing hickory, thence a little west of south twenty chains to a post located in like manner and thence northwest to the place of beginning, containing twenty-two and sixty-nine one-hundredtlis acres. Appellant’s tract contained three and seventy one-hundredths acres, in the form of a right-angled triangle, of which the hypothenuse was, until quite recently, understood by the parties to be the line last mentioned—the dividing line between them. A survey made by a son of Alkire in 1889, without the knowledge of appellee, put the starting point of her tract three rods further east and cut off from the southwest side, along its whole length, as previously understood, a strip of just that width. Thereupon appellant obtained from Alkire a deed of that part of this strip which was in front of his tract, and on it did the cutting complained of. This strip and the land adjoining on both sides was timber land. It is probable there was no fence between the tracts of these parties until within the period of twenty years next before this suit was brought. But as far back as 1804 one Adams, then owning the land adjoining appellant’s on the south, and like his understood to be abutting on the Boyer tract, built his fence on the line now claimed by appellee; and appellant, some years after he became the owner of his, and but little less than twenty before the commencement of the suit, built his fence by a continuation of that of Adams, on the same line. Deal and Hughes, owning next to him on the north, so fenced theirs. All of these parties, for more than twenty years before and until the survey in 1889,. recognized this line as the true boundary of their respective lands. They also well understood that Boyer claimed the adjoining land on the other side of it; that he claimed by virtue of a deed, and that under that claim he cut timber for fuel, posts and rails indifferently over the tract claimed. Perhaps it is not clear that any was cut twenty years before the suit, on this strip, but from appellant’s own statement of his understanding it is certain that he would not have questioned Boyer’s right if he had seen him cut every tree on it. He had himself marked the division line between them as he understood it, by the erection of his fence, and distinctly acquiesced in Boyer’s known claim to the land on the other side up to that line. Boyer on his part acquiesced in that demarlcation, with full knowledge of the fence and of the line it indicated. He and his successors claimed to that fence and disclaimed as to all beyond it.

If this was the true line of Boyer’s land, according to his deed, then any appropriate use, openly and notoriously made, of any part of the tract therein described, was sufficient possession of the strip in dispute to support this action; and it is not denied that from time to time for many years up to the time of the late survey, Boyer and his successors exclusively, openly and as proprietors, cut timber from that tract for fuel, posts and rails. And if it was not the true line, yet if he and appellant were adjacent owners their positive acquiescence in it as the division line would make' it such as between them and their respective privies in estate. City of Bloomington v. Cemetery Association, 126 Ill. 221; Fisher v. Bennehoff, 121 Ill. 431-8; Bauer v. Gottmanhausen, 65 Ill. 503-4; and authorities in those cases cited.

We think there was some evidence that it was the true line, and perhaps more that they were adjacent owners. They themselves understood they were, claimed to be so and acted accordingly. Why was not that sufficient, prima facie, as between them ? We recall nothing hi the case that would even seem to be to the contrary, except the fact that Milan Alkire, who had formerly owned the adjacent land all along the line and had conveyed to appellant the parcel he had claimed, after the late survey made to him a deed of the strip in dispute. But as against appellee that transac- ■ tion was res inter alios, and not competent to prove that ■ Alkire owned it. And while' the survey of 1889 changed the boundary line of her land, it also entirely failed to show an intervening owner—being incomplete without further proof that the southwestern line of the Boyer tract, wherever it was, was not made the northeastern boundary of the tract previously conveyed to appellant. The abstract does not- sot forth that former deed nor refer to it as being in the record. If it did not describe the land thereby conveyed as being bounded on the northwest by the land of Boyer, why was it not produced % The parcels held by Adams and by Beal and Hughes, on both sides of appellant’s, were included in the land conveyed to Alkire by the master, and the presumption is that he conveyed to them. They also, like appellant, supposed that according to their deeds their tracts abutted on Boyer’s. Heither of those deeds was produced. If they did not so describe the lands thereby respectively conveyed, then Alkire had reserved a strip of timber between the lands of other parties, nearly half a mile in length and only three rods in width, on which he could hardly fell a tree, turn a wagon or make a road for twice its value. It does not appear that he ever exercised an act of ownership over it, nor did any witness ever hear of his making any claim to it, from the date of his deed in 1861 to that of the survey in 1889.

From all these circumstances the jury might well have believed that he conveyed to these parties respectively up to the land of Boyer.

The survey of 1889, made without the authority or knowledge of appellee, did not bind her, and was not conclusive as to the line in question; and if appellant and the other parties referred to, on one side, and Boyer on the other, were adjacent owners, the fencing by them, acquiesced in by him, beginning when the corner posts of Boyer’s land and their bearing trees were a quarter of a century fresher than when that survey was made, was some evidence that the line thus indicated was the true line. It is said in the argument for appellant, in reply, that the surveyor claimed to have found the remains of the hickory bearing on the starting corner as described in the deed to Boyer, but the abstract contains-no such statement.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Lachman v. Deisch
71 Ill. 59 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1873)
Taylor v. Koshetz
88 Ill. 479 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1878)
City of Bloomington v. Bloomington Cemetery Ass'n
18 N.E. 298 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1888)
Northrup v. Smothers
39 Ill. App. 588 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1891)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
46 Ill. App. 54, 1891 Ill. App. LEXIS 501, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pitts-v-looby-illappct-1892.